Рациональная фармакотерапия в кардиологии (Nov 2018)

Metabolic Syndrome: Development of the Issue, Main Diagnostic Criteria

  • Yu. N. Belenkov,
  • E. V. Privalova,
  • V. Y. Kaplunova,
  • V. Y. Zektser,
  • N. N. Vinogradova,
  • I. S. Ilgisonis,
  • G. A. Shakaryants,
  • M. V. Kozhevnikova,
  • A. S. Lishuta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.20996/1819-6446-2018-14-5-757-764
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 5
pp. 757 – 764

Abstract

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Obesity is one of the leading and the most serious risk factors of cardiovascular diseases. Overweight provokes many metabolic and hemodynamic disorders. About 30% of inhabitants of the planet have overweight and prevalence of obesity increases by 10% every 10 years according to the WHO data. The probability of arterial hypertension in obese patients is 50% higher than in people with normal body mass. Framingham study showed that obesity is an independent, significant risk factor of ischemic heart disease, myocardial infarction, cerebral stroke and diabetes mellitus. The most dangerous is the central obesity with the preferential fat deposition in the abdomen. Combination of visceral obesity, violation of carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, arterial hypertension, and close pathogenic relationship between these factors underlie the isolated symptom complex known as metabolic syndrome. J. Vague was the first to describe relationship between abdominal obesity with cardiovascular disease and mortality in 1947. In our country G.F. Lang noticed common combination of arterial hypertension with obesity, lipid and carbohydrate metabolism disorders. Thus, metabolic syndrome significantly increases risk and severity of cardiovascular disease. Within last decades criteria of metabolic syndrome stays constant. The factors of insulin resistance and endothelial dysfunction as stages of the pathogenesis of the metabolic syndrome have been studied in detail. The mechanisms of insulin resistance and endothelial dysfunction are discussed in detail in this article as well as inflammatory markers and the significance of highly sensitive C-reactive protein.

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